Engineering education, from BTech to research, must be revamped to encourage critical thinking, interdisciplinary training and application.
Team Careers360 | November 6, 2021 | 10:40 AM IST
By T Nagarajan & Santhi Natarajan
Global markets see technology as the deciding factor in all disciplines, which is the true seed for competitions and collaborations. This has forced nations across the world to realign their vision statements, prioritizing STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) as a key game-changer. This proposed growth trajectory demands engineers with critical “interdisciplinary” knowledge, supplemented by a wide intellectual span rather than focused narrow knowledge groups. Repositioning engineering education to achieve the next growth phase shall ensure sustained economic practices and social well-being across nations.
As an interdisciplinary engineering intellect emerges as the need of the hour for nation-building, there still exists a striking gap in the engineering education structure. A conventional approach towards curriculum and content offerings across engineering disciplines needs serious restructuring, with strong emphasis on the following:
This holy grail is sure to replace and reposition engineers in key positions of economic and developmental leadership, where they form and share the vision of the nation’s growth in realistic and true spirit.
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The stagnant funding opportunities from the state and central governments towards engineering research is a major hurdle. With artificial intelligence (AI) emerging as the latest paradigm of engineering solutions, the advancements in computing technologies seem to support and complement the computing requirements of such high profile and huge datasets associated with the AI applications.
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The basic science research fraternity also has started embracing the AI-centric platforms and solutions for their high-performance offerings. The existing funding schemes tend to overlook the initial huge establishment costs of high profile engineering research laboratories, which is quintessential for interdisciplinary research. Joint funding from the government, public and private sector shall help in overcoming the funding shortage, and in developing tangible solutions that all stakeholders can jointly contribute to.
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The Institutes of National Importance produce the best minds at the undergraduate level, thanks to the generous funding from the central government and the unparalleled legacy created jointly by the esteemed faculty and student group. But there is an attrition of talent as we move from public institutions to private institutions, due to compromise in quality and lack of funding. Over the last two decades, as the industry started accommodating the engineering workforce as mere commodities for billing, the key outcomes of engineering education also deteriorated as it focused on generating a workforce with minimalistic skillsets. Barring the premium tier-1 institutions, the remaining lack the vision to produce graduates who are critical thinkers, problem solvers and skilled to excel in the fast-evolving technology landscape. Critical thinking is needed, as we look forward to revamping engineering education, towards building the best faculty and students.
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The engineering fraternity can then share a common vision towards building an intellectual community that can comprehend complex engineering problems in applications and convert them into tangible innovative solutions, from an interdisciplinary perspective. The fraternity shall reflect in its every action, its ethical and social commitment to the causes of national development, while inclusive enough in terms of diversity, quality and agility. Such an ecosystem shall attract the best of talent from faculty groups and student groups, appreciating and respecting the cultural and intellectual heterogeneity.
Dr. T. Nagarajan is head and Dr. Santhi Natarajan an associate professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering – Research at Shiv Nadar University, Chennai
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